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Figurative Language Practice

Directions: Choose only one answer. You are responsible for making clean marks and erasing your mistakes.
Try your best. When you are done, check your answers.
SECTION 1 DEFINITIONS: Match the term with the definition. Shade in the appropriate bubble.
For questions 1 through 4. Not all of the choices are used.

1. metaphor B. comparison of two or more things using like or as

2. alliteration C. when one idea or sentence is stretched over two or more lines.

3. simile D. repeating the same starting sounds of words.

E. comparison of two or more things not using like or as

For questions 5 through 8. Not all of the choices are used.

4. rhythm A. repeating the same starting sounds of words.

5. repetition B. when one idea or sentence is stretched over two or more lines.

6. rhyme C. a regular pattern of stresses, like a beat.

7. alliteration D. when a poet repeats a word or words to emphasize

E. when two words share the same final sound

For questions 9 through 12. Not all of the choices are used.

8. personification A. when a words pronunciation imitates its sound

9. onomatopoeia C. giving human traits or characteristics to an object or idea

10. imagery D. writing that uses the five senses to create pictures

E. exaggeration for effect

SECTION 2 EXAMPLES
Directions: Read the following examples of figurative language. Identify the poetic device that is most clearly
being used. Choose the best answer. UNDER YOUR ANSWER CHOICES, WRITE THE REASON YOU
CHOSE THIS ANSWEER USING TEXTUAL EVIDENCE. You do not have to use complete sentences.

13. When you, my Dear, are away, away, / How wearily goes the day.
A year drags after morning, and night / Starts another year
a. metaphor b. onomatopoeia c. irony d. simile e. hyperbole(exaggeration)
14. Chicago is a city that is fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action.
a. enjambment b. metaphor c. simile d. onomatopoeia e. repetition

15. Gracefully she sat down sideways, / With a simper smile


a. rhyme b. simile c. metaphor d. personification e. alliteration

16. Driphissdriphiss fall the raindrops.


a. metaphor b. hyperbole c. personification d. onomatopoeia(words that sound like what they are) e.
simile

17. The fountain tossed its water, / Up and up, like silver marbles.
a. simile b. hyperbole c. rhyme d. metaphor e. idiom

18. Falstaff sweats to death, as he walks along; / Were't not for laughing, I should pity him.
a. rhyme b. personification c. simile d. metaphor e.
hyperbole(exaggeration)

19. Lives of great men remind us / We can make our lives sublime;
And, departing, leave behind us / Footprints on the sands of time.
a. simile b. metaphor c. onomatopoeia d. personification e. hyperbole

20. His sorrow goes / Like mountain snows / In waters sweet and clear,
a. simile b. hyperbole c. metaphor d. onomatopoeia e. repetition

21. The tear-drop trickled to his chin: / There was a meaning in her grin
a. hyperbole b. rhyme c. repetition d. simile e. metaphor

22. All night long with rush and lull / The rain kept drumming on the roof:
a. simile b. hyperbole c. repetition d. personification e. rhyme

24. My love is like a red, red rose.


a. repetition b. personification c. onomatopoeia d. simile e. rhyme

25. When the stooping sky / Leans down upon the hills
a. hyperbole b. personification c. metaphor d. simile e. repetition

26. Theres a patch of old snow in a corner.


a. simile b. metaphor c. imagery d. irony e. repetition

SECTION 3 WHOLE POEMS: Read the poems and the questions. Choose the BEST answer. UNDER
YOUR ANSWER CHOICES, WRITE THE REASON YOU CHOSE THIS ANSWER USING TEXTUAL
EVIDENCE. You do not have to use complete sentences.
We Wear the Mask Poet Among Barbarians
Paul Laurence Dunbar By: John Gould Fletcher

We wear the mask that grins and lies, The rain drives, drives endlessly,
It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,-- Heavy threads of rain;
This debt we pay to human guile1; The wind beats at the shutters,
With torn and bleeding hearts we smile, The surf drums on the shore;
And mouth with myriad2 subtleties3. Drunken telephone poles lean sideways;
Dank summer cottages gloom hopelessly;
Why should the world be overwise, Bleak factory-chimneys are etched on the filmy distance,
In counting all our tears and sighs? Tepid2 with rain.
Nay, let them only see us, while It seems I have lived for a hundred years
We wear the mask. Among these things;
And it is useless for me now to make complaint against them.
We smile, but, O great Christ, our cries For I know I shall never escape from this
To thee from tortured souls arise. Dull barbarian country,
We sing, but oh the clay is vile4 Where there is none now left to lift a cool jade winecup,
Beneath our feet, and long the mile; Or share with me a single human thought.
But let the world dream otherwise,
We wear the mask!

1. Guile: treacherous cunning; skillful deceit. 6. Tepid: only slightly warm; luke warm.
2. Myriad: a vast number; many.
3. Subtleties: being difficult to detect.
4. Vile: loathsome; disgusting.
5. Docile: yielding to direction.

27. Which of the above poems has a continuous rhythm?


a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems

28. Which of the above poems use rhyme?


a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems

29. Which of the above poems uses more hyperbole?


a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems

31. Which of the above poems uses metaphor?


a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems

32. Which of the above poems uses simile?


a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems

33. Which of the above poems uses repetition?


a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems
34. Which of the above poems uses more personification?
a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems

35. In which of the above poems does the speaker use a pleasant or joyful tone?
a. We Wear the Mask b. Poet Among Barbarians
d. neither of these poems c. both of these poems

SECTION 3.1 Read the poems and the questions. Choose the BEST answer. UNDER YOUR ANSWER
CHOICES, WRITE THE REASON YOU CHOSE THIS ANSWEER USING TEXTUAL EVIDENCE. You do
not have to use complete sentences.

A Patch of Old Snow Bee, Im Expecting You!


Robert Frost Emily Dickenson

Theres a patch of old snow in a corner Bee, Im expecting you!


That I should have guessed Was saying yesterday
Was a blow-away paper the rain To somebody you know
Had brought to rest. That you were due.

The frogs got home last week,


It is speckled with grime as if Are settled and at work,
Small print overspread it, Birds mostly back,
The news of a day Ive forgotten The clover warm and thick.
If I ever read it.
Youll get my letter by
The seventeenth; reply,
Or better, be with me.
Yours,
Fly.

36. Which of the above poems uses rhyme?


a. A Patch of Old Snow b. Bee, Im Expecting You c. neither d. both

37. Which of the above poems uses more personification?


a. A Patch of Old Snow b. Bee, Im Expecting You c. neither d. both

38. Which of the above poems uses simile?


a. A Patch of Old Snow b. Bee, Im Expecting You c. neither d. both

39. Which of the above poems uses hyperbole?


a. A Patch of Old Snow b. Bee, Im Expecting You c. neither d. both

40. Which of the above poems resembles a letter?


a. A Patch of Old Snow b. Bee, Im Expecting You c. neither d. both

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